Matthew Fuller on Thu, 4 Jul 96 15:11 MDT |
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nettime: I/O/D 3 |
I/O/D 3 Information Background: I/O/D is a interactive magazine available free over the internet. Featuring art, sound, text and images from an international array of contributors. It has gained a strong following amongst interactive designers as well as general computer users as a result of its dedication to finding the most awkward and interesting nooks and crannies in multimedia. A new issue has just been published. I/O/D 3 Much of the work known to you as <multimedia> treats its constituent media in certain ways during the process of interpretation into an <interactive> application. Images are chewed up at a rate-of-knots and mulched into background eye-candy and spastic <micons>. Sounds belch a simulation of the process of feedback at the user's every mouse-click and key-stroke. Text is taken out of its familiar habitat and transposed into a differently-abled facsimile of itself. I/O/D 3 disrupts the homogenised multimedia application environment to expose a playground in and between the dodgy proprietary software on your machine. Masquerading as a rudimentary form of component software technology, this issue of I/O/D shuns the top-down approach of application led interactive media product to let loose the characteristics qualities of each piece of data in its own right. - Situated between content-rich applications, <Index> is our first offering. Use it, after consenting to our licensing agreement, as one way to open I/O/D 3 applications. - Staring at the small screen, Ronald Sukenick's <Static Story for Small Screen> dares the image to match its own dynamic. This is a piece of interaction that we recommend that you print, and go outside to read. - <Utility> by Paquito Bolino is the Disk Doctor struck off for messin' with the methadone. We think you'll find it useful. - Dante's vision of hell, or Desktop metaphor? <Limbo> by the London Psychogeographical Association has installed itself into your operating system. Where can I get it? I/O/D 3 is available (along with all other issues of I/O/D) to download from: http://www.pHreak.co.uk/i_o_d/ For further information contact: Post: I/O/D, BM Jed, London WC1N 3XX, UK Email: matt@axia.demon.co.uk Technical Requirements: To run, I/O/D requires a Macintosh with at Least 8 Megabytes of RAM, Quick Time and 14 inch colour monitor. -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: majordomo@is.in-berlin.de and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de